Bacterial DNA sequence used to map an infection outbreak
14 November 2012Researchers use genome sequencing to dissect and control an MRSA outbreak.
Research
Researchers use genome sequencing to dissect and control an MRSA outbreak.
Each year 5,600 patients are diagnosed with cancer at a late stage because of inequalities. Study underlines importance of awareness campaigns.
Cambridge scientists at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, near Geneva, have spotted one of the rarest particle decays ever seen in nature.
A new collection of the last letters of Captain Scott and the Pole Party has been released to mark the centenary of the discovery of...
Ben Cartwright, a member of Cambridge’s Material Culture Lab, is an archaeologist whose research focuses on the ways in which the crafts of spinning and...
The amount of time it takes to diagnose dementia could be reduced from the current 18 months to just three months, thanks in part to...
Viruses are capable of outmanoeuvring the ability of bacteria to commit 'suicide', new research shows.
As the birthplace of Fascism – and both ally and victim of Nazi Germany – Italy presents a particularly complex case study of how countries...
A landmark study of divided cities such as Jerusalem and Belfast suggests that while physical divisions remain these cities cannot thrive, and that a 'post-conflict’...
A five-year project to publish the collected works of pioneering British economist John Maynard Keynes, is today unveiled by Cambridge University Press.